I was talking to someone with IBD who mentioned having small, round bruises all over their body. I often have similar bruises, although mine are almost entirely on my legs. These bruises seem to appear more frequently when I'm feeling worse, but all doctors I've mentioned it to say, "Well, maybe you just bruise easily." But I don't. There's no obvious cause for these bruises.

The person I was talking to mentioned that someone told her it looked like she had low platelets. I looked it up, and found that symptoms associated with low platelets are:

Easy / unexplained bruising

Prolonged bleeding from cuts

Excessive or bleeding from gums

Excessive bleeding after a surgical or dental procedure

Heavy menstraual periods

Blood in urine / stool

I experience most of these symptoms.

Does anyone else have any experience with low platelets, or know anything about a connection between Crohn's and thrombocytopenia? I intend to bring it up with my doctor(s) next chance I get, but at the moment, I can't justify going in just for this as it doesn't seem to be a danger to my health at the moment and it's not a new occurrence, so I thought I might as well see if anyone has any information.

Thanks!

__________________

Sarah.
Diagnosed with Crohn's disease 12/6/08.
Have taken: Prednisone, 6mp, methotrexate, Pentasa.
Currently waiting for a new medication!

Also, as the appearance of the bruising may be a factor, here's an image of my bruises. They always look like this when they appear, and just occur in different areas on my legs and in different sizes. I almost always have at least one or two small ones. It's also not abnormal for them to occur in a line (like the three lower ones) that looks like fingerprints (but trust me, it's not), but that might be a coincidence.

No they would check something else. Her platelets are tested aleast every two months as they are part of the full bloods.

The bruising no where as bad as yours, more she didn't remember the injuries occurring. And after showing her then swimming coach, he said they were caused by hitting the lane ropes while swimming. Eg bruising of knuckles.

They have the genetic form (I escaped it) and my sister's both have regular monitoring. My eldest sister is the most severe.

They get some bruising that look like yours, and one of my sister's had trouble at work once when someone thought her partner was hitting her from the type of bruising she had.

It's a simple thing to check, they just need to do a FBC, and clotting factors , if low, they repeat over a time to see if it's resolving itself or if it's more permanent.

I will warn you, when my brother was being diagnosed, he had to have a bone marrow test, I'm not sure about the rest of my family but I think it was because he was diagnosed later (22-23 my sisters were diagnosed as children) . This freaked my brother out (everything did back then) but they said it was totally routine.

Depending on the cause, and the level of thrombocytopenia, you may need to have iron supplements regularly.

Day to day, it doesn't really bother my family , they just bruise easy and have to warn doctors before having any procedures. My sister's do have very heavy periods. They have a warning card that they carry with them.

I guess a lot of medications can cause low platelets, but I'm not on any right now so it's not a factor for me.

Nicola, in my case, most people seem to assume my bruises come from sex - probably because they often look like fingerprints. I think that's why all of my doctors have been dismissing it so easily. Your sister's situation sounds frustrating!

Thanks again for the information! I'm definitely going to bring it up with my doctor next time I go in. It doesn't sound like a big issue, which is good, but I like to know what's going on with my body!

Hi! My husband has immune caused thrombocytopenia pupura while I have Crohn's. We were both diagnosed within one year of each other which begs the question of an envionmental trigger. Anyway, he is doing great, he just has low platelets which run 60-100. The doc said to not worry unless it goes below 50. He gets some bizarre bruising, but feels wonderful. He gets bi-yearly blood tests but so far hasn't needed any transfusions. He says he rather have low platelets than Crohn's.

Louann Carrollwww.louanncarroll.com
Crohn's survivor and advocate
Trying the natural method that's not working so well right now. I DO NOT recommend this to anyone.

__________________Louann
First diagnosed 12/4/10
Humira 4/7/11 and lovin' it

Previous Meds:

Methotrexate--had kidney/liver damage
Lialda--allergic to aspirin--but didn't know until my Crohn's got much worse.
Prednisone--only when I have to!

I was diagnosed with low platelets in June 2008 having been on Azathioprine for Crohn's for 9 years. The general concensus is that the Azathioprine was the cause. Since then I have stopped taking the drug but the platelets have continued to drop and are currently at 60. The strange thing is that I appear to have no symptoms and the haematologist tells me not to get hung up on numbers.

It seems to be difficult to get a definitive answer but I've recently undergone a bone marrow biopsy which will hopefully give us some more clues. If you have a look at the last couple of posts on my blog I go into a bit more detail.

__________________Wrestling The Octopus.com - the companion website to my, shortly to be published, book on 4 decades of Crohn's and other issues

I was diagnosed with low platelets in June 2008 having been on Azathioprine for Crohn's for 9 years. The general concensus is that the Azathioprine was the cause. Since then I have stopped taking the drug but the platelets have continued to drop and are currently at 60. The strange thing is that I appear to have no symptoms and the haematologist tells me not to get hung up on numbers.

Generally numbers don't seem a big deal unless you are having surgery or are pregnant. My sister has just had a baby and all through her pregnancy her platelets were 40-60, and they never really get much higher than that. The only time the thrombocytopenia has caused anyone any problems was when my eldest sister bled out during delivery of her first child, other than that, it has just been a case of 'tell your doctor and don't use blood thinners ' .

From our experiences, once they rule out anything sinister they just keep an eye on it and only interfere if they really have to.

A low platelet count did delay my reversal operation by a few weeks as the surgeon wasn't prepared to operate without a letter from the haematologist giving the all clear.

I've now been told that if I need to have any procedure that could lead to bleeding, ie. a tooth extraction, there has to be a supply of platelets available just in case I need replenishing. That means any major dental work will need to be done at a hospital, not by my local dentist.